They will definitely take advantage of this bill. That's a good tool, a first step towards this area of honour killing, but they need training to know what the mindset is of this community and how they can deal with them, because there are very complicated details of their mindset. I have seen cases that reach to that extent, because there have been reports when they come across these families where this crime has not yet been committed, but there are circumstances, and they are not able to find out the real situation there. Sometimes they overlook that because of their family unit, a kind of the control of the family on those victims. They need that training to know this community's mindset first.
They must have this tool not to control, but to punish those criminals who are committing this crime. But I don't see this as being really helpful to preventing there being victims of this crime. For that, we need some special training not only for police officers and experts, but also for communities to change their mindset through education, through awareness, through communication, through their own community leaders, and especially from youth, who are born and raised in this country and who understand the value of an individual's rights and freedoms.
The generation who has been brought up in those countries and came here have their own mindset. They have not taken a first step towards to understanding what freedoms and rights mean. They don't know how to respect rights. They need to be educated, but through the youth. My area is to create basic awareness and education. I motivate them to question themselves, if they are living up to the standard of humanitarian values or if they are living up to the standard of Canadian rights and freedoms. They don't even understand if this question is valid.